The Nets haven’t beaten a team with a winning record this season. But starting with Sunday’s game against the Bulls, they will get plenty of chances to change that over the next few weeks.

The afternoon showdown with Chicago at Barclays Center will be the Nets’ first of seven games in their next 10 against teams with records of better than .500, with five of them coming in Brooklyn.

The Nets are 0-6 against teams with winning records — including losses to the undermanned Trail Blazers and Heat.

“We want to win as many games as we can,” Nets coach Lionel Hollins said after practice Friday. “It doesn’t matter if they’re plus .500, sub. 500. … It’s about winning games.

“At the end of the year, if you look at the good team’s records, they probably have more wins against teams with sub-.500 records and are probably somewhere near .500, or just below, against teams with winning records.”

That was the formula the Nets rode to 49 wins — tied for second-most in franchise history — two years ago with this same core of Deron Williams, Joe Johnson and Brook Lopez, and this group potentially could be even better, because of how much healthier Williams has been.

That year, the Nets went 15-27 against teams with .500 or better records but went 34-6 against losing teams, which was good enough to get them home-court advantage in the first round, and it would be just fine with Hollins if they can replicate that kind of formula again this season.

“I was with Hubie Brown [as an assistant] in Memphis and we won 50 games [in 2003-04] … and against all the good teams we had a losing record,” Hollins said. “But we beat everybody under .500 and everybody in the East, and we won 50 games.

“That’s what it’s all about. Winning games and getting to the playoffs, and when you get there hopefully getting a matchup that favors you, and I’m not talking record-wise, but a matchup that favors you.”

Nevertheless, it wouldn’t hurt for the Nets to get a victory against a winning team, if for no other reason than for them not to be guaranteed seven losses in their next 10 games.

But if Brooklyn finally is going to break through, it is going to need to change this inconsistent pattern: playing well for patches of games, but never for a full 48 minutes.

“I think it’s things we have been working on in practice to be better at in a game,” Johnson said. “But honestly, we do it for a half, we do it for three quarters, and just for whatever reason in the fourth quarters, especially, we get a little hesitant.

“We had a 22-point lead we blew the other night [in Philadelphia], and we can’t have that if we’re trying to be a good team. I understand where [Hollins is] coming from, but the things he wants us to do, I think we do them, and we do them for a quarter or two or three.”